Designer tissues: synthetic, living and hybrid materials
- đ¤ Speaker: Hagan Bayley, Professor of Chemical Biology, University of Oxford đ Website
- đ Date & Time: Tuesday 02 June 2020, 11:00 - 12:00
- đ Venue: Max Perutz Lecture Theatre, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Abstract
By 3D printing, we have assembled synthetic tissues comprising patterned networks of thousands of aqueous droplets joined by lipid bilayers. The droplets communicate with each other and with the environment through engineered protein pores. To mimic tissues, the synthetic networks should be endowed with various properties including the ability to store and use energy, to move and change shape, to detect signals, to carry out computations and take up and release molecules. To a modest degree, these goals have been achieved. A related printing technology has been used to pattern a variety of living cells, providing structures that include small tumours and fragments of neural tissue. The mm-scale printed structures can be used as building blocks for cm-scale structures ranging from synthetic axons to hybrid constructs containing both synthetic and living cells. An important goal is to communicate with these constructs by using external stimuli, have them process the incoming signals and accordingly produce useful outputs for applications in medicine.
Series This talk is part of the MRC LMB Seminar Series series.
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Hagan Bayley, Professor of Chemical Biology, University of Oxford 
Tuesday 02 June 2020, 11:00-12:00